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WhatsApp CEO Jan Koum quits Facebook due to privacy intrusions

” It is time for me to move on . . . I’m taking some time off to do things I enjoy outside of technology, such as collecting rare air-cooled Porsches, working on my autoes and playing ultimate frisbee ,” WhatsApp co-founder, CEO and Facebook board member Jan Koum wrote today. The announcement followed soon after The Washington Postreported that Koum would leave due to disagreements with Facebook management about WhatsApp user data privacy and weakened encryption. Koum obscured that motive in his note that tells,” I’ll still be cheering WhatsApp on- only from the outside .”

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg promptly commented on Koum’s Facebook post about his deviation, writing” Jan: I will miss running so closely with you. I’m grateful for everything you’ve done to help connect the world, and for everything you’ve teach me, including about encryption and its ability to take power from centralized systems and set it back in people’s hands. Those values will always be at the heart of WhatsApp .” That remark further tries to downplay the idea that Facebook pushed Koum away by trying to erode encryption.

The move goes 3.5 years after WhatsApp’s acquisition, entailing Koum may have vested much of his stock and have fewer financial incentives to bide. It’s currently unclear what will happen to Koum’s Facebook board seat that WashPo says he’ll vacate, or who will replace him as WhatsApp’s CEO.

One possible nominee for the CEO role would be WhatsApp business executive Neeraj Arora, a former Google corporate developing manager who’s been with WhatsApp since 2011 — well before the Facebook acquisition. A source described him as the# 4 at WhatsApp.

Values misaligned

Koum sold WhatsApp to Facebook in 2014 for a jaw-dropping $19 billion. But since then it’s more than tripled its user count to 1.5 billion, inducing the price to turn messaging into a one-horse race seem like a steal. But at the time, Koum and co-founder Brian Acton were assured that WhatsApp wouldn’t have to run ads or merge its data with Facebook’s. So were regulators in Europe, where WhatsApp is most popular.

A year and a half later, though, Facebook pressured WhatsApp to change its terms of service and give users’ phone numbers to its parent company. That let Facebook target those users with more precise ad, such as by letting business upload lists of phone numbers to hit those people with promotions. Facebook was eventually penalty $122 million by the European Union in 2017 — a paltry sum for a company earning more than$ 4 billion in profit per quarter.

But the perceived invasion of WhatsApp user privacy drove a wedge between Koum and the mother company well before the Cambridge Analytica scandal transgressed. A source confirms that Koum had been considering leaving for a year. Acton left Facebook in November, and has publicly supported the #DeleteFacebook movement since.

WashPo writes that Koum was also angered by Facebook executives pushing for a weakening of WhatsApp’s end-to-end encryption in order to facilitate its new WhatsApp For Business program. It’s possible that letting multiple squad member states of a business all interact with its WhatsApp account could be incompatible with strong encryption. Facebook plans to finally make money off WhatsApp by offering bonus services to big companies like airlines, e-commerce sites and banks that want to conduct commerce over the chat app.

Jan Koum( Photo: TOBIAS HASE/ AFP/ Getty Images)

Koum was heavily critical of advertising in apps, once telling Forbes that” Dealing with ads is depressing . . . You don’t make anyone’s life better by making advertisements work better .” He vowed to keep them out of WhatsApp. But over the past year, Facebook has rolled out display ads in the Messenger inbox. Without Koum around, Facebook might push to expand those obtrusive ads to WhatsApp as well.

The high-profile departure arrives at a vulnerable day for Facebook, with its big F8 developer conference starting tomorrow despite Facebook simultaneously shutting down parts of its dev platform as penance for the Cambridge Analytica scandal. Meanwhile, Google is trying to fix its fragmented messaging strategy, trenching apps like Allo to focus on a mobile carrier-backed alternative to SMS it’s building into Android Messages.

While the News Feed constructed Facebook rich, it also made it the villain. Messaging has become its strongest suit thanks to the dual dominance of Messenger and WhatsApp. Considering many users surely don’t even realize WhatsApp is owned by Facebook, Koum’s departure over policy fears isn’t likely to change that. But it’s one more phase in what’s becoming a thick line connecting Facebook’s business aspirations to its cavalier approach to privacy.

You can read Koum’s full post below .

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